Thomas Bradwardine: A Fourteenth-Century Augustinian View of Time

In John Doody, Sean Hannan & Kim Paffenroth (eds.), Augustine and Time. Lexington Books. pp. 209-226 (2021)
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Abstract

Thomas Bradwardine is a figure who, for much of the twentieth century, tended only to be discussed by historians of Reformation thought. Less frequently, passing references may have been made to his pioneering work in physics and mathematics, as one of the famed “Merton Calculators.” More recently, some scholars have become interested in more explicitly philosophical and logical aspects of Bradwardine's writing, including his remarkably original solution to the Liar Paradox and his views of modality, particularly contingency. The revival of interest in Bradwardine as a philosopher in the last twenty to thirty years is due at least partly to a particular interest in his philosophy of time, prompted largely by the analysis of Edith Wilks Dolnikowski. In this chapter, I will introduce readers to the life and work Bradwardine, and explain how his thought represents a significant strand in the thread of Augustinianism running through the early fourteenth century. I will begin with a brief biography of his eventful life and historical context. I will then explain why an examination of this figure may be of particular relevance in a volume on time in the Augustinian tradition, which will include an explanation of what I take to be characteristic of Augustinian views on the subject of time. As we eventually turn to the examination of Bradwardine’s own account of time, it will be important to consider first a prominent non-Augustinian view to which he is responding, namely, that of William Ockham. As we come to the summary and assessment of Bradwardine’s own view of time, outlining its inherently Augustinian elements, I will argue, pace Dolnikowski, that it is indeed appropriate to view Bradwardine’s philosophy as fundamentally reactionary in nature, against what he perceives to be heretical pelagianism in the thinking of Ockham. In my concluding remarks, I will speak briefly of the reception of Bradwardine’s views of time in the decades and centuries that followed.

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